Seinfeld episodes always had a way of making us laugh, cringe, and occasionally leave us hungry. Whether it’s soup, Junior Mints, black and white cookies or babka.

Chef Andrew Rea, of Binging with Babish, has obviously been studying his reruns, and recreated a few Seinfeld Foods. Although, the Soup Nazi’s version of mushroom soup is the only food in the series that even mentions a recipe — Rea improvises, bringing these sitcom props to life.

First up, is the aforementioned Soup Nazi’s Wild Mushroom Soup, followed by Elaine’s Muffin Tops, and a babka battle between chocolate and cinnamon. Now, how do we make a marble rye on the end of a fishing line?

If nonstop Seinfeld reruns aren’t enough to fill your daily quote quota, Signfeld is here to help. The beautifully-designed and printed posters display some of the most memorable and inane quotes from the show about nothing. Posters for you!! Check them out here.

When some of our favorite television shows weren’t taking place at the main character’s home, high school, or other random set — scenes would often unfold at their favorite eating establishment. Whether the actors are sitting comfortably in their favorite booth, or actually work there, the restaurant setting gives the viewer a feeling of comfort — as if we’re actually sitting with, or being waited on by members of the cast.

So that brings us to the greatest of these fictional eateries. And, although they mostly exist in the alternate reality of television, it begs the question of whether we would frequent them if they were real. Also worth noting, is that if we pretend for a second that these diners did exist, then Yelp — which is unfortunately real — would certainly have something to say about them. Enjoy.

Seinfeld, the “show about nothing,” was often set at our main characters’ favorite coffee shop, or contained storylines such as losing Junior Mints in people.

Seinfood is a series of posters created by artist Rinee Shah, that celebrates some of the most well-known foods and food-centric storylines from the series. The illustrations include Monk’s Cafe, the infamous marble rye, and the not horse-friendly Beef-A-Reeno. Check out the full poster series here, and you’ll be inspired to grab a few Seinfeld DVDs, or catch up with the epic sitcom in syndication.

There’s no denying the brilliance of Fusilli Jerry and Macaroni Midler. But Russian artist Sergey Pakhomov takes pasta art to a whole new level. Using his patented pasta-making techniques, Pakhomov creates anything from scale models of planes and tanks, to small pasta towns.

While including almost any type of uncooked pasta available, Sergey has completed about 30 sculptures, each one taking 20-30 hours to complete. Now, Ravioli George will have something to get around in.